Background

There is even a License Finder to help companies ensure all gems they use
meet their licensing needs. This tool depends on license information being available in the gemspec.
Including a license in your gemspec is a good practice, in any case. It makes you a better Ruby citizen.

Gem stats

Steve Klabnick gave a talk at RubyNation 2013 about his work on Resque wherein
he mentioned that he could estimate the userbase of Resque by looking at the rate and number of downloads of Resque when he released
a new version of the gem. I became interested in looking at gem download trends to generate statistics on a wider basis, as a proxy
for helping to determine which gems are worth looking at. (Yes, ruby-toolbox can sort of do that).

I was spurred into action when getting a number of issues for metric_fu that turned out to be related to
old releases or even metrical (which is no longer necessary).
I realized I could look at gem download statistics to determine the extent of the usage of old releases of metric_fu. I also realized I have published
and abandoned forks of gems on some occassions that people really should not be using. I could see if that is a problem
as well.

Making an issue of a missing license

I began using the gems gem to collect the download stats for my gems, their dependencies,
and some libraries of interest. While I was collecting download stats, I decided to collect other data such as licenses,
urls, etc. Then I started collecting data on all recently updated or released gems. As I looked at the number of gems
without licenses, I remembered about LicenseFinder and how having a license in a gemspec is the easiest way for someone or a company
to audit the licenses of all the gems they’d like to use.

It turns out, there’s a really great command-line GitHub issues gem (ghi). With little fuss,
I was soon checking my downloaded gem stats for gems without licenses for links to a github account, if there was already an issue
for a license, and if not, create one. My only false positive was the mysql2 gem which had the license in the gemspec, but hadn’t
released that version of the gem, yet.

I watched for activity on these issues, answered any questions, and thanked anyone who added the license. The response rate was pretty
good and people seemed thankful. It felt good.

As I iterated on this, I added more text to the issues I was creating to answer, in advance, why have a license in the spec,
how to add it, and how I found them. Since I now reference the rubygems.org issue about surfacing gem licenses on the site
in my issue, you can go there to see a list of all the issues
I’ve since created and their status.